At 17, I was just babysitting for cash. The twins were asleep. Their parents, Willa and Dorian, left their usual note: “Back by midnight.” But they never came back.
By 4 a.m., I saw their faces on the news—arrested for fraud, caught fleeing the country. I was still in their house. The kids had no idea.
I called my mom. Then CPS. When the twins woke up, they asked for pancakes and stories. I had no answers—only tears.
Months later, a letter came: “Don’t forget them. They’re the only innocent ones. —W.”
I didn’t. I visited. When they were about to be split in foster care, I stepped in—at 20, broke and still in school—I became their guardian.
We scraped by. But they smiled again.
At 22, I got a $40,000 check from a trust Willa had left. It changed our lives.
Now, the twins thrive. And I’m just the girl who stayed when no one else did.